- Jan 11, 2014
- 8,617
- 17,196
didn't he already announce that? It's just all of his threads from the last few years organized into a book, correct?
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Good question. Not gonna lie I'd pick Florida. Better than gambling on the rest of the trash out there.
Good question. Not gonna lie I'd pick Florida. Better than gambling on the rest of the trash out there.
Anyone drive through one of those "immigration checkpoints" yet?
Officials say latest immigration checkpoint in N.H. nets no arrests
https://www.concordmonitor.com/Latest-New-Hampshire-immigration-checkpoint-nets-no-arrests-19825979
Sounds about white
Don't think he was one yet.Bro, I forgot Rico was a federal worker.
Don't think he was one yet.
I think he was an aspiring Federal worker
Typical Lib entitlement.why are people crying about not getting a raise when we are getting tens of dollars more on our paycheck from the trump tax cut. y’all sounds ungrateful right about now.
DapperNt fam
NT FAM
BREAKING CHARACTER....MY STATE IS LAME
Lawyers are cold-calling phone numbers in far-flung Central American villages, and enlisting church pastors and schoolteachers to help. They are spreading the word on radio stations, putting up posters and setting up Spanish-language hotlines. They are trying to reach every parent separated from their children by the Trump administration.
More than a month after a court deadline passed for the government to reunite families divided by President Trump’s border crackdown, nearly 500 children remain in U.S. government-funded shelters without their parents, according to court papers filed Thursday night.
Advocates and government officials say it could be weeks, months or longer before they are together.
Nearly two-thirds of the 497 minors still in custody — including 22 “tender-age” children, who are younger than 5 — have parents who were deported, mostly in the first weeks of Trump’s “zero-tolerance” policy.
In addition to his current legal troubles, Patten has also been questioned by the Senate Intelligence Committee, according to a source familiar with the interview. That interview was regarding his long-standing relationships with Trump’s one-time campaign chairman Paul Manafort and Konstantin Kilimnik, a Manafort business associate whom Mueller has accused of ties to Russian intelligence.
In his plea agreement, Patten admitted to making false or misleading statements in his testimony before the Intelligence Committee. He did so, the agreement states, in an effort to conceal the inauguration straw donation scheme.
Patten also admitted that he and an unnamed Russian national received more than $1 million to promote the interests of the Ukrainian Opposition Bloc party in the U.S. Prosecutors say the money was routed through a bank account in Cyprus, where Manafort also held shell companies used to illegally hide funds from U.S. tax collectors.
Cyprus accounts were also used to illegally reimburse Patton for the inauguration straw donation scheme.
Patten and the unnamed foreign national, dubbed Foreigner A in the indictment, drafted op-eds in American publications and set up meetings with members of Congress and executive branch officials to advance their clients’ interests on U.S. soil. Such conduct requires registration as a foreign agent with the Justice Department.
Patten registered as a foreign agent for separate work on behalf of a Georgian political party, prosecutors note, suggesting that he was aware of FARA registration requirements.
Patten’s personal website says he has “has worked for multiple political parties and office-holders in Ukraine, exceeding expectations in each instance.” It also boasts work on behalf of clients in George, Kazakhstan, Iraq, Kurdistan, and Russia.
Patten also worked with the company Cambridge Analytica during the 2014 midterm election cycle, helping the company hone its microtargeting tools during that cycle. Years later, Cambridge would work with the Trump campaign, assisting its data operation during the 2016 election.
Patten’s website previously hailed that 2014 work, without naming the company. “Sam worked with one of London’s most innovative strategic communications companies to introduce new technologies and methodologies to U.S. campaigns during the 2014 congressional cycle,” it bragged. “Currently this approach is being adopted by at least one major U.S. presidential candidate.”
That page no longer appears.
Though Friday’s indictment does not identify Foreigner A or the company he formed with Patten, The Daily Beast reported in April that Patten and Kilimnik jointly formed a political consulting firm in Washington in early 2015. Prosecutors say that Patten’s alleged undisclosed foreign lobbying work began that year.
The company, Begemot Ventures International, says it “helps its clients win elections, strengthen political parties, build the right arguments before domestic and international audiences, and achieve better results.”
At the time, Patten denied that the company did any work on U.S. soil. Begemot “is a privately-held, small consulting company that has provided public relations and political strategy advice for clients outside the United States, and [is] not related to the ongoing circus here,” he told The Daily Beast.
Patten did not respond to a request for comment on the indictment.
YIKES!